Some of the most significant works to enter public collections this April
Art Institute of Chicago
Edlis/Neeson Collection of 42 contemporary artworks
Andy Warhol, Jasper Johns, Roy Lichtenstein, Cy Twombly, Gerhard Richter…the list of artists whose work is included in Stefan T. Edlis and Gael Neeson’s bequest is exceptional. The Chicago-based couple’s gift, which is valued at around $400m and includes key examples of US Pop art, is the largest in the museum’s history. The group will be on permanent view at the museum from early 2016.
Moderna Museet, Stockholm
Ulf Linde’s Duchamp archive
Marcel Duchamp visited Stockholm in 1961 on the occasion of the exhibition ‘Movement in Art’. While there he worked closely with the Swedish art critic Ulf Linde, who created replicas of many of the artist’s most significant works – which Duchamp then signed and authenticated. This acquisition of the critic’s extensive Duchamp archive, which includes sketches, correspondence, books and photographs, underscores Sweden’s close association with the artist – something that was celebrated at a recent symposium at the museum.
Dallas Museum of Art
The Harp Lesson (1791), Jean Antoine Théodore Giroust
National Gallery of Canada
Bonsecours Market, Montreal (1880), William Raphael
National Portrait Gallery, London
Kate Tempest (2013), Dav Stewart
Dav Stewart’s photograph of a thoughtful-looking Kate Tempest originally appeared on the cover of the spoken word artist’s album Everybody Down, and is currently part of the National Portrait Gallery’s touring exhibition ‘Picture the Poet’. Now it will take up a permanent place in the gallery’s collection.
Dia Art Foundation, New York
Dreamhouse (1969), La Monte Young and Marian Zazeela